Sediment suppresses herbivory across a coral reef depth gradient
Sediment suppresses herbivory across a coral reef depth gradient
Sediments are a ubiquitous feature of all coral reefs, yet our understanding of how they affect complex ecological processes on coral reefs is limited. Sediment in algal turfs has been shown to suppress herbivory by coral reef fishes on high-sediment, low-herbivory reef flats. Here, we investigate the role of sediment in suppressing herbivory across a depth gradient (reef base, crest and flat) by observing fish feeding following benthic sediment reductions. We found that sediment suppresses herbivory across all reef zones. Even slight reductions on the reef crest, which has 35 times less sediment than the reef flat, resulted in over 1800 more herbivore bites (h−1 m−2). The Acanthuridae (surgeonfishes) were responsible for over 80 per cent of all bites observed, and on the reef crest and flat took over 1500 more bites (h−1 m−2) when sediment load was reduced. These findings highlight the role of natural sediment loads in shaping coral reef herbivory and suggest that changes in benthic sediment loads could directly impair reef resilience.
1016-1018
Goatley, Christopher
b158dc1a-76f3-4ace-9d33-260d8c76ac93
Bellwood, David R.
829e5839-9ac7-4f63-961c-8d0bf8caab8a
24 October 2012
Goatley, Christopher
b158dc1a-76f3-4ace-9d33-260d8c76ac93
Bellwood, David R.
829e5839-9ac7-4f63-961c-8d0bf8caab8a
Goatley, Christopher and Bellwood, David R.
(2012)
Sediment suppresses herbivory across a coral reef depth gradient.
Biology Letters, 8, .
(doi:10.1098/rsbl.2012.0770).
Abstract
Sediments are a ubiquitous feature of all coral reefs, yet our understanding of how they affect complex ecological processes on coral reefs is limited. Sediment in algal turfs has been shown to suppress herbivory by coral reef fishes on high-sediment, low-herbivory reef flats. Here, we investigate the role of sediment in suppressing herbivory across a depth gradient (reef base, crest and flat) by observing fish feeding following benthic sediment reductions. We found that sediment suppresses herbivory across all reef zones. Even slight reductions on the reef crest, which has 35 times less sediment than the reef flat, resulted in over 1800 more herbivore bites (h−1 m−2). The Acanthuridae (surgeonfishes) were responsible for over 80 per cent of all bites observed, and on the reef crest and flat took over 1500 more bites (h−1 m−2) when sediment load was reduced. These findings highlight the role of natural sediment loads in shaping coral reef herbivory and suggest that changes in benthic sediment loads could directly impair reef resilience.
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Published date: 24 October 2012
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Local EPrints ID: 470176
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470176
ISSN: 1744-9561
PURE UUID: daaa5306-0952-48a2-8a0c-1d14e2d90128
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Date deposited: 04 Oct 2022 16:40
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14
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Author:
Christopher Goatley
Author:
David R. Bellwood
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